


Nichiporchik, however, described G2A's business model as "fundamentally flawed" and said it "facilitates a black market economy". G2A is popular because it offers an easy way for people to sell off keys for games they don't want, and in the process customers get a cheap price. G2A, which acts as a retailer and an online marketplace for video game key selling, sort of like an eBay for PC games, is perhaps the most well-known website of its kind, and even sponsors streamers and game events. In an email sent to Eurogamer Alex Nichiporchik, boss of Punch Club and SpeedRunners publisher tinyBuild, accused G2A of selling $450,000 worth of its games. To recap: earlier this week tinyBuild claimed G2A, a popular PC key-reselling website, sold nearly half a million dollars' worth of its games - and didn't receive a penny in return. TinyBuild's Punch Club is cheap as chips on G2A. The row between G2A and tinyBuild over PC game key reselling is getting ugly, with accusations of blackmail and ultimatums flying around.
